Tuesday, March 29, 2016

Today at S2e TV

People
like you have decided that they've had enough of the barbaric killing of animals
on fur farms and in fur traps for cruelly produced fashion.

Millions of
animals are killed by trappers every year for clothing companies such as Canada
Goose. Some traps, like steel-jaw traps, can cut into the flesh of an animal,
often down to the bone, mutilating the animal's foot or leg.

Join the
movement, take the #FurChallenge, and help make a difference:
http://www.peta.org/action/fur-challe....

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youtube its me john coming back at you for another review tonight i have a ice
cream cake on a stick lol . thank you for watching please like subscribe share
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Adelanto,
California, population 32,000, is a little city in the middle of the desert, the
kind of place you pass by without even noticing on the drive from Los Angeles to
Las Vegas.

Like many of the cities in sprawling San Bernardino county, it
faces severe financial problems, teetering on the edge bankruptcy. For a time,
there was even talk of dissolving Adelanto and absorbing it into its larger
neighbor Victorville.

But then, along came Johnny “Bug” Woodard and his
big idea: Save Adelanto by legalizing marijuana. Woodard, a self-described
gun-toting Tea Party Republican, decided to run for city council on the promise
of turning around the town's finances by allowing the mass cultivation of
cannabis within city limits.

"I had already picked out some property in
Arizona to move my family to Arizona, because I really didn't think I'd be
elected," says Woodard. "I mentioned the 'M-word.' Mention the 'M-word':
political suicide."

http://democracynow.org
- Last week, North Carolina enacted a sweeping anti-transgender law, widely
considered to be the most wide-ranging anti-trans law to take effect this year.
It was introduced after the city of Charlotte passed its own ordinance seeking
to protect the right of transgender people to use the bathroom that matches
their gender identity. In Part 2 of our interview, Payton McGarry, a transgender
student at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, talks about why he
became a plaintiff in the federal lawsuit challenging the North Carolina law.